The effect of location error on moment tensor decomposition: synthetic and Eagle Ford field data examples

Author(s):  
Michael Kratz* ◽  
Michael Thornton
Geophysics ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 83 (3) ◽  
pp. C85-C97 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nepomuk Boitz ◽  
Anton Reshetnikov ◽  
Serge A. Shapiro

Radiation patterns of earthquakes contain important information on tectonic strain responsible for seismic events. However, elastic anisotropy may significantly impact these patterns. We systematically investigate and visualize the effect of anisotropy on the radiation patterns of microseismic events. For visualization, we use a vertical-transverse-isotropic (VTI) medium. We distinguish between two different effects: the anisotropy in the source and the anisotropy on the propagation path. Source anisotropy mathematically comes from the matrix multiplication of the anisotropic stiffness tensor with the source strain expressed by the potency tensor. We analyze this effect using the corresponding radiation pattern and the moment tensor decomposition. Propagation anisotropy mathematically comes from the deviation between the polarization and the propagation direction of a quasi P-wave in an anisotropic medium. We investigate both effects separately by either assuming the source to be anisotropic and the propagation to be isotropic or vice versa. We find that both effects have a significant impact on the radiation pattern of a pure-slip source. Finally, we develop an alternative visualization of source mechanisms by plotting beach balls proportional to their potency tensors. For this, we multiply the potency tensor with an isotropic elasticity tensor having the equivalent shear modulus [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text]. In this way, we visualize the tectonic deformation in the source, independently of the rock anisotropy.


Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (8) ◽  
pp. 1469 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sriniketh Sukumar ◽  
Ruud Weijermars ◽  
Ibere Alves ◽  
Sam Noynaert

The recent interest in redeveloping the depleted Austin Chalk legacy field in Bryan (TX, USA) mandates that reservoir damage and subsurface trespassing between adjacent reservoirs be mitigated during hydraulic fracture treatments. Limiting unintended pressure communication across reservoir boundaries during hydraulic fracturing is important for operational efficiency. Our study presents field data collected in fall 2017 that measured the annular pressure changes that occurred in Austin Chalk wells during the zipper fracturing treatment of two new wells in the underlying Eagle Ford Formation. The data thereby obtained, along with associated Eagle Ford stimulation reports, was analyzed to establish the degree of pressure communication between the two reservoirs. A conceptual model for pressure communication is developed based on the pressure response pattern, duration, and intensity. Additionally, pressure depletion in the Austin Chalk reservoir is modeled based on historic production data. Pressure increases observed in the Austin Chalk wells were about 6% of the Eagle Ford injection pressures. The pressure communication during the fracture treatment was followed by a rapid decline of the pressure elevation in the Austin Chalk wells to pre-fracture reservoir pressure, once the Eagle Ford fracture operation ended. Significant production uplifts occurred in several offset Austin Chalk wells, coeval with the observed temporal pressure increase. Our study confirms that after the rapid pressure decline following the short-term pressure increase in the Austin Chalk, no residual pressure communication remained between the Austin Chalk and Eagle Ford reservoirs. Limiting pressure communication between adjacent reservoirs during hydraulic fracturing is important in order to minimize the loss of costly fracturing fluid and to avoid undue damage to the reservoir and nearby wells via unintended proppant pollution. We provide field data and a model that quantifies the degree of pressure communication between adjacent reservoirs (Austin Chalk and Eagle Ford) for the first time.


1989 ◽  
Vol 60 (2) ◽  
pp. 37-57 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. L. Jost ◽  
R. B. Herrmann

Abstract A review of a moment tensor for describing a general seismic point source is presented to show a second order moment tensor can be related to simpler seismic source descriptions such as centers of expansion and double couples. A review of literature is followed by detailed algebraic expansions of the moment tensor into isotropic and deviatoric components. Specific numerical examples are provided in the appendices for use in testing algorithms for moment tensor decomposition.


Author(s):  
Peng Li ◽  
Guo-Chin D. Huang ◽  
Alexandros Savvaidis ◽  
Florentia Kavoura ◽  
Robert W. Porritt

Abstract Analysis of earthquake locations and centroid moment tensors (CMTs) is critical in assessing seismogenic structures and connecting earthquakes to anthropogenic activities. The objective of this study was to gain insights into the seismotectonics of the Eagle Ford Shale play (EF), southern Texas, through relative relocation of earthquakes, assessment of CMT solutions, and investigation of the background stress field. Using Texas Seismological Network (TexNet) data from 2017 through 2019, we were able to relocate 326 earthquakes and obtain CMT solutions for 37 ML≥2.0 earthquakes. These earthquakes are located in the sedimentary basin and uppermost crust, with depths ranging from 2 to 10 km. The earthquake groups in the northeastern EF are linearly distributed along the Karnes fault zone, whereas the southern and western groups are spatially scattered around mapped or unmapped faults. CMT solutions identified 32 normal fault earthquakes and five strike-slip earthquakes. The orientation of the fault plane of most normal fault earthquakes is southwest–northeast, whereas the possible fault plane of the strike-slip fault is from north-northwest to south-southeast, which is roughly perpendicular to the normal faults. Normal and strike-slip faults in the EF are of high dip angles, with the dip angles of the most faults ranging from 60° to 80°. Stress inversion results show that the major orientation of maximum horizontal stress (SHmax) is southwest–northeast, with minor local stress-field rotations. We further estimated earthquake energy release in the EF region using moment magnitude from the CMT solutions, and the cumulative earthquake energy release curve reveals three notable increases in cumulative seismic moment, which occurred in January–July 2018 and January–March 2019, and May–August 2019. Whether these energy releases were caused by anthropogenic activities is a matter for further investigation.


Author(s):  
Ting-Chung Huang ◽  
Yih-Min Wu

Abstract Moment tensor decomposition is a method for deriving the isotropic (ISO), double-couple (DC), and compensated linear vector dipole (CLVD) components from a seismic moment tensor. Currently, there are two families of methods, namely, standard moment tensor decomposition and Euclidean moment tensor decomposition. Although both methods can usually provide workable solutions, there are some minor inconsistencies between the two methods: an equality inconsistency that occurs in standard moment tensor decomposition and the pure CLVD unity and flip basis inconsistency encountered in Euclidean moment tensor decomposition. Moreover, there is a sign problem when disentangling the CLVD component from a DC-dominated case. To address these minor inconsistencies, we propose a new moment tensor decomposition method inspired by both previous methods. The new method can not only avoid all these minor inconsistencies but also withstand deviations in ISO- or CLVD-dominated cases when using source-type diagrams.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document